Wizard's Tour
Give me endless knowledge, and I will use myself as a fulcrum to pry the endless world. The story tells the story of a wizard named Grimm, who relies on his own wisdom and luck to learn his own unique wizarding knowledge, travel to foreign worlds, and participate in wars between different civilizations. (I love "Wizarding World", and I have always wanted to write a "rational" style that is very different from the wizarding works.) The so-called rationality can be explained as "pseudoscience", using the knowledge of wizards in the book to explain the abilities of wizards, so there will be a lot of witchcraft reasoning and experimental plots. Two chapters a day.,If it's explosive, it's three chapters.,If something can't be uploaded, I'll say it in advance.。 Egret can't understand why the author always writes with the protagonist for some balance? Why can't you write an objective protagonist after building a complete world? Now many readers even think that some very reasonable things in the back of the article, just because they are too much stronger than the same level now, they are plug-ins? Why is the heroine always perfect and then follows to the protagonist to the end? Why is the protagonist always a little stronger than a friend but a little weaker than an enemy? Why does the protagonist always have to provoke enemies and forces everywhere when he is incapable? Why is it that the protagonist can practice high-level exercises, but others have to stupidly practice low-level exercises?